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CSCI 11 Google’s Technology and its Impact on our Culture. David Irwin Winter Study 2008 January 5, 2008. Intro. Who am I? “Researcher” at UMass-Amherst Work on GENI and the “Next Generation” Internet CS PhD from Duke; Undergrad at Vanderbilt Prof. Albrecht’s husband Who are you?
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CSCI 11Google’s Technology and its Impact on our Culture David Irwin Winter Study 2008 January 5, 2008
Intro • Who am I? • “Researcher” at UMass-Amherst • Work on GENI and the “Next Generation” Internet • CS PhD from Duke; Undergrad at Vanderbilt • Prof. Albrecht’s husband • Who are you? • What is this class about?
Administrative Details • Class roster • Class meeting times • 6 hours of scheduled meeting time required • I suggest MWF 10am - 12pm • Meeting location: TCL 206 • Course Webpage: http://sysnet.cs.williams.edu/~irwin/cs11/
Syllabus • How to contact me • Webpage: http://www.cs.umass.edu/~irwin • Email: irwin@cs.umass.edu • Course requirements in a nutshell • Google Account • Reading summaries • Position paper • Research paper • Class participation
Class Structure • Each class will start with an overview of the technical details relating to the assigned readings • I will present some technical facts about the topic • Then one (or two) of you will lead the class discussion/debate about the main aspects of the topic • You will prepare PowerPoint slides that help the class understand the assigned readings and highlight the main issues related to the topic and your opinions • Readings will be from a book and external materials (the class is only responsbile for external materials) • You are the expert! • Friday we’ll decide which topics you will be assigned to present
Google Account • Requirements • Sign up for a Google Account • Send me your Google Account name via email • Look at Google Docs • Post your summaries here and share them with me • Due before class on Wednesday • deirwin@gmail.com
Reading Summaries • Upload these to Google Docs and share them with me at least one hour BEFORE class • Summaries should basically summarize your assigned readings • Your goal is to convince me that you read the articles/papers • Summaries should also state your opinion • Do not have to elaborate, but I should be able to determine how you feel • Summaries should be about 1 page in length
Position Paper • Instead of the reading summary, you will prepare a longer (2-3 pages) position paper for the topic that you present to us • Position papers are due at least one hour BEFORE class and should also be uploaded to Google Docs and shared (as doc, txt, pdf, html) • Also upload your PowerPoint slides • This will force you to prepare for class discussion • Position papers summarize assigned readings and incorporate at least two additional sources that support your arguments • Position papers should elaborate on your conclusions and opinions in more detail than reading summaries
Research Paper • Each of you will pick a topic that relates to this class • Write an 8-10 page research paper that describes the technical details and social aspects of the chosen project • Some potential topics are posted on course webpage • Important dates: • Proposals (paragraph or two describing intended topic) are due Monday, Jan 12th at 4pm • Final paper due Wednesday, Jan 28th at 4pm • You must submit a final paper to receive a passing grade
Honor Code and Ethics • The student handbook describes the Honor Code and Computer Ethics guidelines. • If you are not familiar with these items, please review them asap. • We take these things seriously…
Topic Overview • 1/7: Internet Overview and the Web • Readings are available on webpage • Post your summaries before class • How was the Internet invented? Who controls it? • 1/9: Search Engine Basics • How does a basic search engine work? • Read an early paper on search engine characteristics Many topics in this course are based on topics covered in CS 082S/182S at Duke University.
Topic Overview • 1/12: Search before Google • What was the state of the art before Google? Look at approaches and highly cited paper • Chapter 3 • 1/14: Google’s Beginnings • Read the “Google Paper” on PageRank • Chapter 4 • 1/16: Business Model for the Internet • How does Google make money? • Chapter 5
Topic Overview • 1/19: Google 2000-2004 • Google’s rise to prominence • Chapter 6 • 1/21: The Search Economy • How Google affects the economics of business? • Chapter 7 • 1/23: Privacy, Government, and Evil • Controversies surrounding Google • Chapter 8 • 1/26: Google 2004 - • Google’s IPO, the future, and maybe some class presentations • Chapter 9, 10, and 11
For Next Time… • Think about which topic you want to present • Also think about your opinion on the topic • I will allow two of you to choose the same topic if you have opposing views • Please read the Internet readings that are posted on the course webpage • Send me (via sharing on Google Docs) your reading summary before class (use “CS11 reading summary” as subject of email) • Think about final paper topic